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BE/BTech seats in the private engineering colleges are vacant, which is turning these institutes into ghost campuses. In order to fill the vacant seats, engineering colleges are now lowering the admission bar and hiring agents.

All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) recently published a data that suggests over half of BE/BTech seats in the country are going vacant each year. AICTE has passed a rule that will force these institutes to shut their operations if they have more than 70% vacant seats. Engineering institutes around the country follow different marketing gimmicks to lure students into getting admission in their colleges.

According to a report on Indian Express, agents are hired by these private colleges to get admissions. Most of these agents are hired as a â€˜consultantâ€™ for the record. The main agent taps his network of sub-agents to lure engineering aspirants. The most common method used by these agents is sending bulk SMSs and use telephone marketing methods. These agents are paid anywhere between Rs 20,000 to Rs 60,000 for per student that they convert for the college.

The uneven growth in the private institutes has led to the creation of these middlemen in the system. The practices like this are making the degrees getting devalued in the industry. According to ACITEâ€™s data, out of 1.55 lakh BE/BTech seats, only 49% seats are filled across India. Maharashtra has 1.55 lakh engineering seats in the country. After Maharashtra, Uttar Pradesh stands fourth with 1.42 lakh seats, out of which 74% seats were vacant in 2016-17.

The rules for filling admission varies from the state to state. In Uttar Pradesh, Dr. APJ Abdul Kalam Technical University (AKTU) has a requirement for all the affiliated engineering colleges to fill 85% of its intake through the state-level entrance examination and AKTU counseling, the remaining 15% seats can be filled through management quota. Most of these 15% seats are filled via agentâ€™s network.

All these agents make over Rs 10 lakh a year by helping these private institutes. With the stricter norms of AICTE, colleges have to take the help of middlemen to fill their seats. In the process of focusing on the number of admissions, the colleges do not invest enough resources in order improve the quality of education.